The Royal Society's annual science extravaganza packs some interesting stuff into 5 days of love and research.
The Royal Society's annual science extravaganza packs some interesting stuff into 5 days of love and research.
A journal halts publication of a study on the benefits of meditation for heart disease to review additional data.
The recipient of the first synthetic organ transplant—a synthetic trachea seeded with the patient’s own stem cells—is sent home from the hospital.
South Korea approves the first stem-cell medication for clinical use.
Unhappy with management, two editors-in-chief of the Croatian Medical Journal bid the publication goodbye.
New research raises doubt about whether cutting dietary sodium reduces risk of death from heart disease.
Controversial new research links autism to the environment, not genetics.
Free radicals, widely believed to promote cancer, may actually slow tumor growth.
Fenugreek seeds are banned in Europe after authorities point the finger at them as a potential source of the deadly E. coli outbreak.
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in cancer biology and related areas, from Faculty of 1000